> Anecdote time. Remember there used to be "brand name" floppy disks and> generic floppy disks, and the brand name ones cost a lot more because> they were supposedly safer? Well, big secret, studies were done and> the no-name disks came out better. Why? Because selling at commodity> prices the generic makers could not afford returns. So they made them> well.

I don't think so. I remember we had much more problems with nonamedisks. And yes, certain brands had been problematic too, but most(such as Fuji and 3M, and others) were fine.

> It is like that with PCs. Supposedly you get a lot more reliability> when you spend more money and buy all high end near-custom gear. In> fact, the cheap stuff just keeps on chugging, because those guys can't> afford to have it break.

The real life can't agree with this at all. The servers keep workingfor years and the cheap stuff quit fast (if initially working, whichis not always the case).

> The worst bug I've seen in a server this year? A buggy bios in a Dell> server that would issue a keyboard error and sit and wait for somebody> to press F1 when there was no keyboard attached.

Most BIOS (all I've seen in this Millennium) have an option to disablethat.

On a server board you can usually have a remote console, how couldthat work otherwise?